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The following is a list of commentators[1] to be featured in CBC Television's Olympic Games coverage.

Hosts

Year Prime-Time Host Daytime Host(s) Late-Night Host(s) Cable Host(s)
1960 Summer Doug Smith[2]
1964 Summer Ted Reynolds[3]
1968 Summer Lloyd Robertson[4][5]
1972 Summer
1976 Summer Lloyd Robertson[6][7]
Ernie Afaganis[8]
1984 Summer Brian Williams[9] John Wells
1988 Summer Ron MacLean Terry Leibel
1992 Winter
1992 Summer
1996 Summer
1998 Winter Dave Randorf (on TSN)
2000 Summer
2002 Winter
2004 Summer
2006 Winter
2008 Summer Ron MacLean Scott Russell
Diana Swain
Ian Hanomansing
2014 Winter Scott Russell
Diana Swain
David Amber
Andrew Chang
Andi Petrillo
2016 Summer Scott Russell Ron MacLean
Andi Petrillo
David Amber
Scott Russell
2018 Winter Andi Petrillo
Alexandre Despatie
Craig McMorris
Kelly VanderBeek
2020 Summer Andi Petrillo (Morning)
Perdita Felicien
Andrew Chang
Alexandre Despatie
Heather Hiscox
2022 Winter Harnarayan Singh, P. J. Stock, Hailey Salvian (CBC/TSN/SNET (Hockey Show))

Ted Reynolds joined the CBC in 1956 and covered numerous sports and events, notably the Olympic Games, Commonwealth Games, Pan American Games and Grey Cup. He provided commentary for 23 sports and 10 Olympiads.

CBC's 1968 Summer Olympic host Lloyd Robertson was praised by The Globe and Mail writer Leslie Millin for his cool demeanour in the face of many technical glitches including "strange breaks, noises, lapses and unscheduled fade-outs." Millin applauded Robertson, normally a newscaster, for "working with the grace and agility of a man hired to stamp grapes in a Sicilian winery."[10]

Brian Williams[11] was the principal studio anchor for CBC's Olympic Games coverage for the 1984 Winter, 1984 Summer, 1988 Winter, 1988 Summer, 1992 Winter, 1996 Summer, 1998 Winter, 2000 Summer, 2002 Winter, 2004 Summer and 2006 Winter Olympics.

Terry Leibel became the first woman to co-host CBC Sports Olympic coverage during the 1996 Summer Olympic Games in Atlanta, Georgia. She also covered the 2002 and 2006 Winter Olympic Games and the 2004 Summer Olympic Games. She earned Gemini Award nominations for her work in the Atlanta and Sydney Olympics and won a 2003 Gemini Award becoming the first female sports broadcaster to do so.[12] She was also the first woman to do play-by-play for the Olympics, handling cycling, equestrian and white-water events for NBC Sports during the Summer Games in Barcelona in 1992.

Scott Russell was the network's top broadcaster for gymnastics and has covered them at the Olympic Games of 1996, 2000, 2004, 2008*, 2012, 2016, and 2020 (delayed by the Covid-19 pandemic until 2021), the 1994 Commonwealth Games and the 1999 Pan American Games. (* - He was the host for the second half of the 2008 Summer Olympics, since the previous host, Ron MacLean's.[13] mother died).

Dave Randorf hosted TSN's coverage of the 2000 Summer Olympics, 2002 Winter Olympics, 2004 Summer Olympics, and 2010 Winter Olympics. Working for Canada's Olympic Broadcast Media Consortium, Randorf co-hosted the CTV Olympic Morning block during the 2012 Summer Olympics.[14]

Alexandre Despatie joined the broadcast team for Canada's French-language television coverage of the 2010 Olympic Winter Games in Vancouver during a brief break from training for the 2012 Games. He co-anchored the coverage of the opening and closing ceremonies alongside legendary Quebec hockey commentators Richard Garneau and Pierre Houde, narrated numerous athlete profiles, and took viewers on a tour of Granville Island, where many francophone musicians performed during the Olympics.

Kelly VanderBeek worked as an analyst/host during the Vancouver Olympics and London Olympics for CTV, continuing with the Sochi Olympics with CBC. She hosted the Raising an Olympian features and was a part of the PrimeTime Panel discussing hot topics from the day in sport. She has also worked as a guest host for Sportsnet, CBC, and Sportscene. In 2018, Vanderbeek provided daily CBC Olympic Overnight Show co-host duties, alongside Craig McMorris at the PyeongChang Winter Olympics.[15]

Craig McMorris has worked as an analyst for the CBC since 2014, providing snowboarding commentary at the 2014 Winter Olympics, 2018 Winter Olympics, and the 2022 Winter Olympics. He served as cultural content for the 2016 Summer Olympics in Rio de Janeiro, and he also worked as a commentator for the CBC at the 2020 Summer Olympics, covering skateboarding in its Olympic debut.[16]

Andi Petrillo anchored CBC's coverage of the 2014 Winter Olympics in Sochi Russia. On October 24, 2015, CBC Sports launched a new show, Road to the Olympic Games, which Petrillo co-hosted with veteran sportscaster Scott Russell. CBC owns the Olympic rights in Canada until the 2032 Games, and the show features elite high-performance athletes. Andrew Chang was also a part of CBC's broadcast team for the 2014 Winter Olympics.[17][18]

In 2018, Perdita Felicien joined the CBC TV network broadcasting the Winter Olympics in Pyeongchang in South Korea and later the Tokyo Olympics (2021).

By event

Winter Olympics

1992

Sport Play-by-play Colour commentator
Alpine skiing
Biathlon
Cross country skiing
Figure skating Chris Cuthbert Paul Martini and Barbara Underhill
Men's hockey Don Wittman Jim Peplinski
Ski jumping
Speed skating Steve Armitage

Steve Armitage reported on and hosted Hockey Night in Canada broadcasts for the Vancouver Canucks for nearly 30 years,[19] the Canadian Football League and Grey Cup for 30 years, the Olympics including speed skating, swimming and diving, and the World Cup. Armitage was laid off by the CBC in August 2014 due to cuts to sports programming and the loss of hockey coverage to Rogers Media.[20] He did, however, return to work for CBC at the 2018 and 2022 Olympics to call events such as long track speed skating. Armitage announced his retirement at the conclusion of the 2022 Winter Olympics.[21]

1998

Sport Play-by-play Colour commentator
Alpine skiing Scott Oake[22] Kerrin Lee Gartner
Biathlon Scott Russell[23] Jack Sasseville
Cross country skiing
Curling Don Wittman[24] Don Duguid[25]
Figure skating Chris Cuthbert Paul Martini and Sandra Bezic
Men's hockey Bob Cole[26]
Mark Lee
Harry Neale
John Garrett
Women's hockey Mark Lee Kylie Richardson
Ski jumping Brenda Irving Ron Richards
Speed skating Steve Armitage[27] Cathy Allinger[28]
Luge Mark Connolly Chris Wightman

Bob Cole's work during CBC's broadcasts of the Olympic ice hockey have also become memorable among legions of Canadians. His call on the final shot of the shootout in the semi-final game of the 1998 Winter Olympics at Nagano between Canada and the Czech Republic represented Canada's then-ongoing failure at the games and haunted fans for the next four years. With Canada scoreless in the shootout and Brendan Shanahan representing their last chance, Cole said in a panicked voice as Shanahan skated in towards Czech goalie Dominik Hasek, "He's gotta score, that's all!" But Shanahan was stopped by Hasek, prompting Cole to dejectedly say "No, he can't do it."[29]

At the gold medal game of the 2002 Winter Olympics in Salt Lake City between Canada and the United States, Cole's animated call of Joe Sakic's second goal of the game is also one of his more memorable moments. Also, when Jarome Iginla scored Canada's fourth goal of the game, with four minutes remaining in the third period, Cole was so excited when the goal was scored he yelled out "GORE!" (a hybrid of "goal" and "score"), and then proceeded to call out "Goal, Canada! Goal! Wow! A lot of Canadian fans here! The place goes crazy here in Salt Lake City, and I guess coast to coast in Canada, and all around the world!" When Sakic scored Canada's fifth goal with 1:20 remaining, Cole yelled out "Scores! Joe Sakic scores! And that makes it 5–2 Canada! Surely, that's gotta be it!" As the final seconds of the game ticked away, and as the crowd broke out in perfect unison singing "O Canada", Cole said, "Now after 50 years, it's time for Canada to stand up and cheer. Stand up and cheer everybody! The Olympics Salt Lake City, 2002, men's ice hockey, gold medal: Canada!"[30][31]

With an average Canadian audience of 10.6 million viewers, that game was the most-watched CBC Sports program, beating the previous record of 4.957 million viewers for Game 7 of the 1994 Stanley Cup Finals (the final game of the 1972 Summit Series between an NHL all-star team and the Soviet Union, which had been the most-watched sports program Canadian television history, was simulcast on CBC and CTV while Cole called the game on CBC Radio), in which the New York Rangers won their first Stanley Cup in 54 years, beating the Vancouver Canucks, another moment Cole himself called: "Here comes the faceoff and blare it Manhattan! The New York Rangers have done it here on a hot June night in New York! The Rangers are Stanley Cup Champions!"[32]

Harry Neale began working as a broadcaster full-time in 1986, where he was teamed with play-by-play man Bob Cole on CBC. Together, the pair broadcast 20 Stanley Cup Finals, the 1998, 2002, 2006 Winter Olympics, the 1996 World Cup of Hockey, and 2004 World Cup of Hockey for CBC. At the gold medal game of the 2002 Winter Olympics in Salt Lake City between Canada and the United States, after Joe Sakic scored Canada's fifth goal with 1:20 remaining, he replied to his partner, Bob Cole's call as, "That's more than enough. Take a look at the Canadian bench. If you doubt by what I say, that's more than enough."

Sandra Bezic served as a commentator for NBC during the 2002, 2006, 2010, and 2014 Olympic games, the World Figure Skating Championships during the early 1990s, and numerous other skating events broadcast by NBC and CBC over the years.

Don Duguid also provided curling commentary for NBC at the 2002 Winter Olympics in Salt Lake City and the 2006 Winter Olympics in Turin with Don Chevrier, and with Andrew Catalon and Colleen Jones at the 2010 Winter Olympics in Vancouver.

2002

Sport Play-by-play Colour commentator
Alpine skiing Scott Oake Kerrin Lee-Gartner
Bobsleigh
Skeleton
Mark Connolly David MacEachern[33][34]
Cross country skiing
Biathlon
Scott Russell Jack Sasseville[35]
Curling Don Wittman Mike Harris[36] and Joan McCusker
Figure skating Chris Cuthbert[37] Paul Martini[38] and Barbara Underhill
Freestyle skiing Vic Rauter Anna Fraser-Sproule
Men's hockey Bob Cole[39]
Chris Cuthbert
Mark Lee
Harry Neale
Greg Millen[40]
Women's hockey Mark Lee[41] Margot Page
Luge Mark Connolly Chris Wightman
Ski jumping Ron Richards
Snowboarding Brenda Irving Rob Stevens
Speed skating Steve Armitage Neal Marshall[42]

2006

Sport Play-by-play Colour commentator Reporter
Alpine skiing Scott Oake Kerrin Lee-Gartner Mark Kelley
Biathlon Scott Russell Jack Sasseville
Bobsleigh
Skeleton
Mark Connolly Dave MacEachern
Cross country skiing Scott Russell Jack Sasseville Mark Kelley
Curling Don Wittman Mike Harris and Joan McCusker Bruce Rainnie
(semis & finals)
Figure skating Mark Lee Paul Martini and Barbara Underhill
Freestyle skiing Brenda Irving Veronica Brenner Mark Kelley
Men's hockey Bob Cole
Jim Hughson
Harry Neale
Greg Millen
Elliotte Friedman
Women's hockey Bruce Rainnie Kylie Richardson Elliotte Friedman
Luge Mark Connolly Chris Wightman
Short track Steve Armitage Catriona Le May Doan
Ski jumping Scott Russell John Heilig
Snowboarding Brenda Irving Tara Teigan Mark Kelley
Speed skating Steve Armitage Catriona Le May Doan

Since joining CBC Sports, Bruce Rainnie has broadcast four Olympic games (2000, 2002, 2004, & 2006). In 2006, he called the gold medal performance of the Canadian Women's Hockey team. Also in 2006, Rainnie was first on the scene to interview Brad Gushue after his rink won gold in Men's Curling. In 2007, Rainnie replaced the retiring Don Wittman as CBC's lead curling commentator.[43]

A six-time medalist at the Canadian Championships, Brian Stemmle currently works as a television colour commentator for Rogers Sportsnet. He worked for CBC during the Olympics in 2006 and was the lead commentator for Alpine Skiing at the 2010 Winter Olympics in Vancouver/Whistler.

2014[44]

Sport Play-by-play Colour commentator Reporter
Alpine skiing Scott Oake Kerrin Lee-Gartner
Biathon Jack Sasseville Beckie Scott
Bobsleigh
Skeleton
Mark Connolly Helen Upperton[45]
Cross country skiing Karin Larsen Jack Sasseville
Curling Bruce Rainnie Mike Harris and Joan McCusker Colleen Jones
Figure skating Brenda Irving Kurt Browning and Carol Lane
Freestyle skiing Mitch Peacock Jeff Bean
Jennifer Heil (moguls)
Men's hockey Jim Hughson Craig Simpson and Glenn Healy Elliotte Friedman
Women's hockey Mark Lee Cassie Campbell-Pascall Jennifer Botterill
Luge Mark Connolly Jeff Christie
Short track Steve Armitage Kristina Groves
Ski jumping Scott Oake Rob Keith
Snowboarding Rob Snoek Craig McMorris
Speed skating Steve Armitage Kristina Groves

At the 2006 Torino Olympics, Colleen Jones did CBC segments about curling. Jones provided curling commentary for NBC's coverage of the 2010 Winter Olympics in Vancouver. She served as the sideline reporter for the curling events at the 2014, 2018 and 2022 Winter Olympics.

Craig McMorris has worked as an analyst for the CBC since 2014, providing snowboarding commentary at the 2014 Winter Olympics, 2018 Winter Olympics, and the 2022 Winter Olympics. He served as cultural content for the 2016 Summer Olympics in Rio de Janeiro, and he also worked as a commentator for the CBC at the 2020 Summer Olympics, covering skateboarding in its Olympic debut.[46]

2018[47]

Sport Play-by-play announcer Colour commentator Reporter
Alpine skiing Doug Dirks Todd Brooker
Kerrin Lee-Gartner
Brian Stemmle
Biathlon Nigel Reed Justin Wadsworth
Bobsleigh Mark Connolly Helen Upperton Karina LeBlanc
Skeleton Jon Montgomery
Cross country skiing Nigel Reed Beckie Scott and Justin Wadsworth
Curling Bruce Rainnie Mike Harris and Joan McCusker Colleen Jones
Figure skating Brenda Irving Kurt Browning and Carol Lane Paul Martini
Freestyle skiing Matt Cullen Mike Atkinson (slopestyle)
Deidra Dionne (aerials)
Jennifer Heil (moguls)
Ashleigh McIvor (ski cross)
TJ Schiller (halfpipe)
Men's hockey Chris Cuthbert Ray Ferraro
Craig Button
P.J. Stock
Alexei Yashin
Rob Pizzo and Cheryl Pounder
Women's hockey Mark Lee Cassie Campbell-Pascall Rob Pizzo and Cheryl Pounder
Luge Mark Connolly Jeff Christie Karina LeBlanc
Short track Mitch Peacock Michael Gilday Charlsie Agro
Ski jumping Signa Butler Rob Keith
Snowboarding Rob Snoek Adam Higgins
Craig McMorris
Speed skating Steve Armitage Kristina Groves Charlsie Agro

Todd Brooker has been a ski commentator on television for a number of years, and has worked for most of the major networks in North America. He has covered alpine skiing for numerous Winter Olympics for U.S. television, and currently provides commentary and analysis on CBC in Canada during the World Cup ski season. Brooker covered alpine skiing at the 2010 Winter Olympics for NBC in the United States.

Cheryl Pounder was a colour commentator for the CBC coverage of the women's hockey tournament at the 2014, 2018, and 2022 Winter Olympics. She also served as a colour commentator for the TSN's coverage of IIHF World Women's Championship hockey tournaments[48][49][50] and succeeded Ray Ferraro as NHL 24 color commentator.[51]

2022[52]

Sport Play-by-play announcer Colour commentator Reporter
Alpine skiing Matt Cullen Brian Stemmle Kelly VanderBeek
Biathlon Karin Larsen Roddy Ward
Bobsleigh Mark Lee Helen Upperton Marivel Taruc
Luge Arianne Jones
Skeleton Cassie Hawrysh
Cross-country skiing Nigel Reed Beckie Scott
Curling Bruce Rainnie Mike Harris and Joanne Courtney[53] Colleen Jones
Figure skating Brenda Irving Kurt Browning
Carol Lane
Kaetlyn Osmond
Meagan Duhamel
Tessa Virtue
Scott Moir
Elladj Baldé
Freestyle skiing Claire Hanna (Aerials)
Signa Butler (Big Air, Moguls, Halfpipe)
Mike Atkinson (Slopestyle)
Peter Ruttgaizer (Ski cross)
Deidra Dionne (Aerials)
Mike Atkinson (Moguls and Halfpipe)
Alex Beaulieu-Marchand (Big Air and Slopestyle)
Kelsey Serwa (Ski cross)
Alison Chiasson
Men's Hockey Chris Cuthbert Mike Johnson Rob Pizzo
James Duthie (host)
Women's Hockey Bryan Mudryk Cheryl Pounder Kenzie Lalonde
Kate Beirness (host)
Luge Mark Lee Arianne Jones Marivel Taruc
Nordic combined Lance Winn Rob Keith
Ski jumping
Snowboarding Rob Snoek (Big Air, Halfpipe, Slopestyle)
Peter Ruttgaizer (PGS and SBX)
Craig McMorris (Big Air, Halfpipe, Slopestyle)
Adam Higgins (PGS and SBX)
Alison Chiasson (Halfpipe and Slopestyle)
Speed skating Steve Armitage Kristina Groves Anastasia Bucsis
Short track speed skating Mitch Peacock Michael Gilday Roseline Filion

Anastasia Bucsis has been CBC's Long Track speed skating analyst since 2018. She has also hosted digital shows for CBC during the Tokyo 2020 Olympics as well as the Beijing 2022 Winter Olympics.[54]

Summer Olympics

1960

For the 1960 Summer Olympics in Rome, Italy, the CBC produced a total of 17 hours of radio and TV coverage. CBC Television broadcast same-day highlights each night. The half-hour package featured was provided by CBS Sports, which had the broadcast rights in the United States. CBS sportscasters Bud Palmer, Gil Stratton, and Bob Richards provided commentary. CBS sent videotapes of each day's events by jet to Idlewild Airport (now John F. Kennedy International Airport) in New York City, where a mobile transmission unit there beamed the pictures to the CBC and CBS networks. On radio, Ward Cornell and Thom Benson gave listeners 15-minute reports every evening except Sunday on the CBC's Trans-Canada Network and Doug Smith gave half-hour evening wrap-ups on the CBC's Dominion Network.

1964

The CBC Television broadcasters for the 1964 Summer games were Ted Reynolds, Dave Cruikshank, Bob McDevitt, Steve Douglas,[55] and Lloyd Robertson. Ward Cornell, Al Hamel, Bob Moir, Don Goodwin, and Bill Good were the broadcasters for CBC Radio.

1972

During the Munich massacre crisis at the 1972 Summer Olympics, Don Wittman and Bob Moir crawled through a hole in a fence to access the Olympic Village and give live reports, while posing as medical staff on the 1972 Canadian Olympic team.[56][57] Wittman and Moir were 50 metres (160 ft) away from the Israeli Olympic team building, and could see the nine hostages sitting in a circle, guarded by the Palestinian terrorist group Black September. They filed radio reports to the CBC, and remained on location all day until the hostages were loaded onto a bus.[58]

In a 1994 interview, Moir discussed the decision to sneak into the Olympic Village by saying,

"We were young and stupid, I guess. [Wittman] and I have always done things like that. We always went after the story."[58]

1976

Sport Play-by-play
Basketball
Boxing
Cycling
Canoeing
Diving Irene MacDonald[59]
Gymnastics
Rowing
Swimming
Track and field
Volleyball Vic Lindal
Equestrian
Field Hockey
Soccer Graham Leggat[60]
Weightlifting
Wrestling Brian Williams[61]

Vic Lindal was a colour commentator in the Sport of Volleyball at four Olympic Games; Montreal, Quebec in 1976 with CBC, Los Angeles, USA in 1984 with CBC, Seoul, Korea in 1988 with CBC, and Barcelona in 1992 with CTV.

Graham Leggat began a second career as an analyst on soccer telecasts for the CBC at the 1976 Summer Olympics and at the World Cup.

Bob Moir was the executive producer for coverage of the 1976 Summer Olympics hosted in Montreal. He envisioned expanded coverage of the Olympics, despite criticism of CBC Sports for spending money from taxpayers to do so. He toured Canada to explain the project and boasted that, "the biggest team in Montreal will be the CBC team ... it will be bigger than the [1976] Canadian Olympic team".[62] His crew for the English-language coverage of the Olympics included 245 people who produced 169 hours of content, compared to 14 hours of content at the 1972 Olympics.[62]

The 1976 Summer Olympics gave CBC Sports hosts their first chance to speak with athletes immediately following events, when Moir had a studio constructed for live televised interviews. When multiple events were held simultaneously, Moir had 20 videotape machines in use to record an event to air at a later time.[62] When Poland played Russia for the gold medal in volleyball, Olympic coverage was extended to show the game to its conclusion, which delayed airing of The National news program by 35 minutes. During the Olympics, Moir had a telephone hotline to CBC director of operations Gordon Craig to discuss airtime, and later commented that he felt a "sense of power" when the news was delayed.[62]

In reference to audience measurement ratings in Canada, Moir felt that "the Montreal Olympics was the impetus for what you see today".[62] He also felt that the model used to cover the 1976 Summer Olympics set the standard used by CBC Sports for future live coverage of the Olympics, and stated that the CBC has not lost money covering an Olympics since 1976.[62]

1984

Sport Play-by-play Colour commentator
Basketball Brian Heaney
Boxing Vic Rauter Peter Wylie
Cycling Gordon Singleton Greg Rokosh
Canoeing John Wood
Diving Irene MacDonald
Gymnastics Ernie Afaganis Keith Russell
Kathy Stoesz
Kaarina Dillabough
Rowing
Swimming Ted Reynolds Byron MacDonald
Mary Ann Reeves
Tennis
Track and field Don Wittman Geoff Gowan
Volleyball Vic Lindal
Equestrian Terry Leibel
Field Hockey Judy McCrae
Soccer Graham Leggat
Weightlifting Aldo Roy
Wrestling Ole Sorensen

Byron MacDonald has also acted as a commentator for swimming events; he was a two-time recipient of the Gemini Award for Best Sports Play-by-Play or Analyst in recognition of his swimming analysis on CBC at the 2004 and 2008 Summer Olympics.[63]

During the 2016 Summer Olympics, MacDonald attracted criticism for remarks on a hot mic that a swimmer in the women's 4 × 200 metre freestyle relay (which was implied to be a member of the Chinese team) had "dropped the ball", and that she "went out like stink, [and] died like a pig." MacDonald and the CBC later apologized for the remark, stating that he meant it as a description of her performance, and did not mean for it to be a personal attack.[64]

1988

Sport Play-by-play Colour commentator
Baseball (demonstration sport)
Basketball Ron Lancaster[65]
Boxing
Canoeing
Diving Irene MacDonald
Equestrian Gail Greenough
Gymnastics Elfi Schlegel[66]
Rowing
Swimming Steve Armitage Alex Baumann[67]
Synchronized swimming Chris Cuthbert Sharon Hambrook
Tennis Robert Bettauer[68]
Track and field Don Wittman[69]
Volleyball Vic Lindal

CBC Television signed Ron Lancaster as a colour commentator on CFL broadcasts in 1980. He was part of a trio that included Don Wittman doing the play-by-play and former Argonaut head coach Leo Cahill doing colour commentary (Cahill left after the 1985 season). He was with the CBC from 1981 to 1990 and was a member of the CBC team at the 1988 Summer Olympics in Seoul, Korea as the play-by-play broadcaster for basketball.

2008[70]

Sport Play-by-Play Colour commentator Reporter
Athletics Mark Lee
Elliotte Friedman
Michael Smith
David Moorcroft
Scott Oake
Synchronized Swimming Karin Larsen Karen Clark Le Poole
Swimming Steve Armitage Byron McDonald Scott Oake
Diving Anne Montminy
Basketball Paul Romanuk
Baseball Jim Van Horne Warren Sawkiw
Softball Hayley Wickenheiser
Football Nigel Reed Jason DeVos Erin Paul
Weightlifting Nigel Reed Aldo Roy
Gymnastics Brenda Irving[71][72][73] Lori Strong-Ballard
Rowing Barney Williams
Canoeing
(flatwater)
Scott Logan
Canoeing
(slalom)
Claudia Kerckhoff-Van Wijk
Volleyball Doug Dirks Charles Parkinson
Erminia Russo
Boxing Vic Rauter Russ Anber
Cycling Mark Connolly Clara Hughes[74]
(Track, Road Mountain)
Kevin O'Brien
(BMX)
Water Polo Rob Snoek
George Gross Jr.
Field Hockey Rob Snoek Hari Kant
Tennis Karin Larsen Michael T. Cvitkovic
Triathlon Barrie Shepley
Wrestling Chris Wilson
Sailing Peter Rusch Fionia Kidd
Equestrian Nancy Wetmore Beth Underhill
(Show Jumping)
Cara Whitham
(Dressage)
Erin Paul
Judo Jeff Marek[75]
Taekwondo Nigel Reed Tino Dossantos

Jim Van Horne has broadcast from five Olympic games, including 1988 in Calgary, covering alpine skiing, 2000 in Sydney covering tennis, 2008 in Beijing, assigned to baseball and softball, and 2010 Vancouver, mentoring the commentators from APTN, the Aboriginal Peoples Television Network, and worked in 2018 Pyeongchang on the worldwide live stream.

Karin Larsen's career in the media began in 1988 as a sports researcher for the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation, and since she began working as a sportscaster, she has been an announcer for six Olympic Games and four Paralympic Games, notably broadcasting the play-by-play for her own sister's silver medal performance in the 1996 Summer Olympics in Atlanta, Georgia. Larsen also announced for synchronised swimming for CBC Sports at the 2008 Summer Olympics in Beijing, China.[76]

During his career, Scott Oake has covered a total of 12 Olympic games for the CBC, including the 2008 Beijing Games where he did play-by-play for flatwater canoeing and rowing events.[77] Oake has covered downhill skiing at every Winter Olympics from Calgary in 1988 to Sochi in 2014.

After his retirement from competitive sport Rob Snoek moved into broadcasting as a play-by-play announcer for Ontario Hockey League games, first for the Oshawa Generals on CKDO,[78] and later for Peterborough Petes games on CJMB-FM.[79] He first joined the CBC's Olympic team in 2002, covering a variety of both main Olympic and Paralympic events.[80]

For the 2008 Summer Olympics and 2016 Summer Olympics, Mark Lee covered the track and field events for CBC.[81]

For the 2008 Beijing Summer Olympics, David Moorcroft provided track and field analysis for the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation. He commentated for Channel 4 at the 2011 World Athletics Championships. During the 2012 London Olympics he again served as a track and field analyst for Canadian television, this time for the CTV-led Olympic Broadcast Media Consortium.[82] In 2016, he performed the same role for CBC/Radio-Canada's coverage of the Rio de Janeiro Olympic Games.[83]

In May 2008, Anne Montminy did commentary for the CBC Television Network at the 2008 Beijing Olympics covering diving competitions.[84]

Michael Smith works for CBC Television Sports and CTV Television as a color commentator for track and field events; in this capacity, he received a Canadian Screen Award nomination for Best Sports Analyst at the 10th Canadian Screen Awards as a commentator for CBC Television's coverage of the 2020 Summer Olympics.[85]

2016[86]

Sport Play-by-Play Announcer Colour commentator Reporter
Athletics Mark Lee Michael Smith and David Moorcroft Scott Oake
Basketball Matt Devlin (Men)
Bruce Rainnie (Women)
Jack Armstrong (Men)
Chantal Vallée (Women)
Beach Volleyball Rob Snoek Mark Heese
Cycling Mark Connolly (Track)
Mitch Peacock (BMX)
Doug Dirks (Mountain Biking)
Richard Wooles (Track)
Kevin O'Brien (BMX)
Lesley Tomlinson (Mountain Biking)
Canoeing Doug Dirks Karen Furneaux
Diving Elliotte Friedman
Mark Lee (Synchronized Diving)
Blythe Hartley Andrew Chang
David Amber
Equestrian Bruce Rainnie Ian Allison
Football Nigel Reed Clare Rustad
Gymnastics Brenda Irving Kyle Shewfelt Andrew Chang
Rowing Doug Dirks Barney Williams Karin Larsen
Rugby sevens Mitch Peacock Andrea Burk
Swimming Elliotte Friedman Byron McDonald Andrew Chang
David Amber
Tennis Rob Faulds Robert Bettauer
Triathlon Brenda Irving Barrie Shepley
Volleyball Charles Parkinson Emily Cordonier and Paul Duerden

Matt Devlin previously served as the play-by-play man for NBC Sports' coverage of Wrestling at the 2008 Summer Olympics.[87]

During the 2012 London Olympics, Kyle Shewfelt served as a gymnastics analyst for the CTV Television Network-led Canadian Olympic Broadcast Media Consortium.[88]

In 2016, Elliotte Friedman was a commentator during CBC's coverage of diving and swimming events at the 2016 Summer Olympics to replace Steve Armitage (who was unable to attend the Games due to his diagnosis with chronic heart failure).[89]

Chantal Vallée has contributed as a colour commentator for basketball on prominent Canadian broadcasting channels, including CBC,[90] CTV, Sportsnet, TSN, and RDS. Her extensive coverage encompasses significant sporting events such as the 2012, 2016 and 2020 Summer Olympics.[91] and the 2019 NBA play-offs.

Clare Rustad has served as a soccer analyst on CBC, TSN and Sportsnet for events including the Pan Am Games, the FIFA Women's World Cup, and the 2020 Tokyo Olympics.[92]

2020[93]

Sport Play-by-play announcers Colour commentator Reporter
Athletics Mark Lee Michael Smith and David Moorcroft Devin Heroux
Rob Snoek
Basketball Dan Shulman Meghan McPeak
Peter Ruttgaizer (3x3) Michael Linklater (3x3)
Beach Volleyball Claire Hanna Mark Heese
Canoeing Matt Cullen (Slalom)
Steve Armitage (Sprint)
Josh Hastings (Slalom)
Karen Furneaux (Sprint)
Cycling Mark Connolly Lesley Tomlinson (Road & Mountain Bike)
Richard Wooles (Road & Track)
Diving Mitch Peacock Blythe Hartley
Equestrian Bruce Rainnie Deanna Phelan
Field Hockey Victor Findlay Scott Sandison
Football Nigel Reed Clare Rustad
Golf Doug Dirks
Gymnastics (Artistic & Trampoline) Brenda Irving Kyle Shewfelt
Judo Karin Larsen Josh Hagen
Karate Douglas Gelevan Chris de Sousa Costa
Marathons Scott Russell Krista DuChene
Marathon Swimming Signa Butler Lisa Bentley
Race Walks Matt Cullen
Rowing Steve Armitage Adam Kreek
Rugby Sevens Nigel Reed Andrea Burk and Phil Mackenzie
Softball Lance Winn Alison Bradley
Sport Climbing Brenda Irving Kimanda Jarzebiak
Swimming Rob Snoek Byron MacDonald Summer Mortimer
Tennis Bruce Rainnie Robert Bettauer
Triathlon Signa Butler Barrie Shepley
Volleyball Rob Snoek Paul Duerden
Water Polo Signa Butler George Cross Jr.
Wrestling Karin Larsen Carol Huynh

Dan Shulman previously worked for CTV in its coverage of the 1994 Winter Olympics from Lillehammer, Norway, covering hockey, and the 1994 World Championships of Basketball.[94]

See also

References

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  2. ^ "Hf Gazette, Wednesday, On And Off. - Page 4". The Montreal Gazette. March 23, 1960. Retrieved May 22, 2024.
  3. ^ "Tv Highlights For Next Week. On Cbc Network. - Page 6". Sherbrooke Telegram Observer. October 8, 1964. Retrieved May 22, 2024.
  4. ^ "Rev Cup Full Day Promised. By V. Color Executive Tive At Cup ..." The Calgary Herald. November 29, 1968. Retrieved May 22, 2024.
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